Second Wave Is “Very Real”

The likelihood of a second, more severe wave of coronavirus infection is “reasonable” as the economy reopens, says the nation’s chief public health officer. Federal researchers predict as many as seventy percent of Canadians may become infected before the pandemic runs its course: “What is your plan?”

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“Astronaut In Rideau Hall”

 

The Governor General

could go easy

on those who prefer astrology, alternative medicine,

or biblical stories,

over facts and reason.

 

After all,

evolution didn’t only create

scientists and engineers.

 

It also created the artists, the spiritualists,

and the climate change skeptics.

 

And those who follow the scriptures

and believe in divine intervention

could forgive the Governor General.

 

After all,

God extends His grace

to the atheists too.

 

(Editor’s note: poet Shai Ben-Shalom, an Israeli-born biologist, examines current events in the Blacklock’s tradition each and every Sunday)

Auditors Target U.S. Property

The Canada Revenue Agency yesterday said it will review six years’ worth of U.S. real estate transactions in a hunt for Canadians with unreported income. Auditors will examine “current and historical records”, the Agency said: “Penalties and interest associated with unreported real estate sales can be substantial.”

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Wife’s Charity To Run Grants

Cabinet yesterday appointed Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s favourite charity to manage a pandemic grant relief program. The Prime Minister’s wife has appeared as an “official ambassador” and public speaker at We Charity events in New York: “I’m curious how that’s not a conflict of interest?”

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Record Spending Bills Pass

The Senate today will pass into law the last of a flurry of spending bills that drive the federal debt to a trillion dollars. One Senator noted bills received scant scrutiny: “A $44 billion supply bill whipped through here in forty-six seconds.”

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Warns Of Internet “Experts”

The Governor General yesterday said Canadians must be wary of “self-appointed experts” on the internet. The remarks by Julie Payette came as cabinet ponders mandatory registration of all digital media: “It’s difficult to decide what is real.”

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Senate Apology For Meredith

Senators yesterday expressed regret for misconduct by ex-legislator Don Meredith. An unnamed “independent expert” is to recommend compensation for employees who accused Meredith of lewd behaviour: “It is just so exasperating.”

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Turn CERB Into Wage Bonus

Arbitrary rules under the $71.3 billion Canada Emergency Response Benefit program discourage people from working, Opposition leader Andrew Scheer said yesterday. Conservatives proposed a descending scale of benefits instead of an all-or-nothing regulation that disqualifies applicants who earn more than $1,000 a month: “Workers are penalized for picking up shifts.”

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Agency Ignored Own Advice

The Public Health Agency of Canada paid more than $300,000 to host a convention including meetings at a ski hill at the same time it ordered cancellation of hockey games, church services and other public events, records show. The Agency yesterday confirmed it cannot get a refund: “We take that extremely seriously.”

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Ex-Chief Predicts Job Cuts

The ex-chief of the federal public service predicts job cuts in the aftermath of the pandemic. “The federal service will be smaller,” said Michael Wernick, former $326,000-a year clerk of the Privy Council: “We saw that before.”

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Cop Unions “Huge Problem”

Police unions have “frequently been a huge problem” in protecting bad officers, says the Liberal chair of the Commons public safety committee. The RCMP Commissioner told a hearing on police abuses she “won’t appreciate getting thrown under the bus” by union members.

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Doctors Seek Death Benefits

The Canadian Medical Association is petitioning Parliament for $300,000 grants to families of front line health care workers who die of Covid-19. Dr. Sandy Buchman, association president, blamed the Public Health Agency for failing to stock up on masks, goggles, face shields and other pandemic supplies: “We would never permit a firefighter to go into a burning building without adequate protection.”

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Senate Suspension Extended

Legislators will extend until September a suspension without pay for Senator Lynn Beyak (Ont.). The Senate deferred a vote on reinstating Beyak after she was compelled to attend hours of Indigenous sensitivity training: “She has learned.”

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Ask If Shouts Are Off Limits

A federal judge is being asked to rule on whether shouting constitutes workplace harassment. A National Research Council investigation that dismissed a ‘raised voice’ complaint is being challenged in Federal Court: ‘You are a lowly advisor, nothing else.’

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